Trump bascially renewed funding that Obama put in place, but Congress let it lapse.....
Biden has increased funding every year since being in office...
HBCU funding
President Donald Trump holds up the Historically Black Colleges and Universities HBCU Executive Order after signing it, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in the Oval Office in the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik) | Andrew Harnik/AP Photo
In January, Trump baffled HBCU leaders when he claimed he saved their institutions by signing bipartisan legislation that included annual funding for historically Black colleges and universities.
The bill is a 10-year renewal of funding. During Obama’s eight years in office, mandatory HBCU funding ranged from almost $80 million to $85 million per year. The same has been true during Trump’s administration.
“He started in January saying he saved HBCUs... People were just shocked,” said Walter Kimbrough, president of Dillard University, a private HBCU in New Orleans. The amount of funding for HBCUs is “the same thing that we had under President Obama.”
Seventeen percent of Black students with bachelor’s degrees earned them from HBCUs, which are more reliant on government funding and have much smaller endowments than predominantly white institutions.
Even after Trump signed the legislation, Michael Lomax, president and CEO of the United Negro College Fund, warned that HBCUs are “woefully underfunded” at an annual state of the HBCU address in March. He’s pushing for a $1 billion grant for HBCU infrastructure, a doubling of Pell grants and a tripling of the Title III funding in the FUTURE Act.
Post Retreads False Claim About Biden’s Funding for Historically Black Colleges
Quick Take
The Biden administration has awarded billions in funding to Historically Black Colleges and Universities, including more than $2.7 billion provided in the American Rescue Plan. Yet a social media post revives an old, false claim that Biden revoked $250 million that then-President Donald Trump “pledged to give historical black colleges for the next 10 years.”
Full Story
The Biden administration has made multiple
investments in support of Historically Black Colleges and Universities, or HBCUs. The White House last year released
a state-by-state list of the $2.7 billion in funding provided through the American Rescue Plan, with the exact amount each school has received.
HBCUs were
established in the early 19th century to provide African Americans with opportunities in higher education that were not accessible due to segregation and discrimination. The schools continue to serve the Black community, creating new generations of leaders and scholars.
However, a social media
post falsely claims that President Joe Biden has cut $250 million in funding that former President Donald Trump pledged to give HBCUs. The post reads, in part: “Biden just revoked the 250 million United Negro College fund that Trump pledged to give historical black colleges for the next 10 years. Still think Biden isn’t a racist dictator?”
In 2019, Trump did sign a bill — the
FUTURE Act — that
permanently provided $255 million in annual support for HBCUs that had
lapsed after Congress didn’t renew the funding.
Biden made no changes to that commitment. In fact, federal funding of HBCUs has
increased every year under Biden. The $2.7 billion in HBCU funding through the American Rescue Plan was in addition to that annual funding increase.
The false claim about Biden’s funding for HBCUs first circulated on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter in 2021. At the time,
Tyrone Couey, president of the National Historically Black Colleges & Universities Alumni Associations Foundation,
told the Associated Press that Biden had not made any cuts to HBCUs.
Lodriguez Murray, senior vice president of public policy and affairs at the United Negro College Fund, or UNCF, told the AP he was disturbed “that someone dares to use UNCF’s good name” to make false claims.
The social media post misrepresents the role of the UNCF, which does not receive any federal funding, as indicated on its
website. The UNCF is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit funded through contributions from individuals, corporations and foundations. The organization also lobbies Congress and the president for support.
It’s worth noting that Biden’s budget for fiscal year 2024
proposes $1.04 billion in funding for HBCUs, tribal colleges and universities and Hispanic-serving institutions, as well as
$30 million “to provide two years of subsidized tuition for students from families earning less than $125,000” and who are enrolled in four-year HBCUs and other minority-serving institutions.